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Ilya, unfortunately we can't choose the non-scientists who would be able to do these things--even Krakauer in his book, "Into Thin Air," discussed the litter of air bottles up on Everest, or the tons of spikes left in all mountains by climbers. I suspect that everything will be debased by humans, space included, but we go on....I won't litter in space, I promise. Let the rich buy the technology, and I'll hope I win Lotto (even though I don't play). ![]()
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Sunset Die Sonne scheidet hinter dem Gebirge. In alle Täler steigt der Abend nieder mit seinen Schatten, die voll Kühlung sind. |
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More on the X-37:
http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=823 |
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NASA is boring because it thinks it has to pander to science-ignorant people. True, the people who elect the politicians who pander to everything are ignorant. But part of NASA's job should have been to make them less ignorant. Only a person who wasn't doing anything for the next ten years would go on a mission to Jupiter. On a mission to Uranus, with present propulsion systems, you'd better take your life with you.
So the problem to solve, if human space flight is a good idea, is the propulsion technology. Or even if it's a lousy idea, because it would be nice to send a probe to the next big comet and have it come back. The pioneers of human muscle-powered flight failed for decades, then the advance of plastics chemistry gave us Mylar. Paul McCready recognized it, and succeeded. NASA has succeeded brilliantly in showing the possibility of robot technology in space. Now that national governments have paid for the underlying research, there's a thriving industry making use of it. The Moon landing was pure humbug, and I have my suspicions about whether it wouldn't really be safer and less expensive to send up unmanned replacements, or robot repair ships, where we now have headline-grabbing bombastically-named "space walks" to fix those satellites that are genuinely scientific in purpose. |
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(By the way, this topic was revived from a 2-1/2-year slumber.)
How so? Fraud? Or, just before its time, not integrated to an overall plan, too political? How pure was that humbug, and what was its nature? (If you're in the never-happened-fraud camp, you might wish to carry your advocacy to the Conspiracy Theories sub-forum, where such actions are safely permitted.)
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The alternative of robotic servicing was closely examined, but Hubble isn't optimally designed for that (access panels, required dexterity, etc), so the cost and risk of a robotic mission was very high. If you're talking about repairing or replacing other satellites, again -- there is no repair of these being performed, so there's no decision to make of repair vs replace. Re just launching an unmanned replacement for Hubble, there is no replacement available for Hubble, so there's nothing to launch. The nearest in capability is the JWST, which has a totally different mission and focuses on the infrared spectrum. |
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But there are spacewalks where they aren't fixing a satellite. Maybe. Does construction of a satellite count as fixing? Inspection? Reconfiguration?
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Boring? What do you want 'em to do, sing and dance? They shoot rockets! They send robots to other planets! They crash things into comets! They let us see stuff a zillion* miles away!
*For the Europeans among us, that's a thousand jillion.
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"If this were play'd upon a stage now, I could condemn it as an improbable fiction." Shakespeare, Twelfth Night Illuminati's Razor-The most complicatedly evil answer is usually the most correct answer. - Fazor "Every book is a children's book if the kid can read." - Mitch Hedberg "Distance doesn’t matter much in space, where if you just start a thing off with the right kind of shove, sooner or later it will get where you want it to go." -Frederik Pohl, Mining the Oort Last edited by Noclevername; 16-January-2008 at 01:40 AM. |
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"If you think the LHC will create black holes, you might as well believe Hobbits are at the bottom of your garden."- Dr. Mike Inglis Rovers forever! - ToSeek "Carl Sagan sent a message to ET, Neil Armstrong walked in the Sea of Tranquility Steve Squyers built Spirit and Opportunity Dan Haylen upchucked in zero gravity." -Brent Simon, The Space Camp Song Sally Ride for NASA Administrator! |
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NASA is there to do research, advance science, and increase our knowledge. Learning is rarely fun. You can try, but it takes effort and money to do it. As long as the people involved are interested and eager, then no extra effort will change the results that they are getting. Sure, it changes opinions on funding, but that is an artifical need. (IMO) And; to many people, anything that is not spine tingling, edge of your seat, suspense is boring. That implies risk. Something we want to avoid. If that person has any knowledge of what it takes in the first place, they will see the inherent suspense.
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Numbers are not case sensitive. (me) |
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"If you think the LHC will create black holes, you might as well believe Hobbits are at the bottom of your garden."- Dr. Mike Inglis Rovers forever! - ToSeek "Carl Sagan sent a message to ET, Neil Armstrong walked in the Sea of Tranquility Steve Squyers built Spirit and Opportunity Dan Haylen upchucked in zero gravity." -Brent Simon, The Space Camp Song Sally Ride for NASA Administrator! |
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"Flying in space is risky business, but just staying on this planet is risky business too." - John Young, astronaut |